When one ear has more acuity than the other, do you compensate by adjusting the balance of sound during listening and mixing?
Brain...?No, because of the brain in between those ears.
Especially frequency response wise our ears are often not equal.
My wife often says something about 'in one ear and out the other'
Thats something I was thinking about lately. Especially frequency response wise our ears are often not equal. I was wondering if someone was experimenting with calibrating their systems for their ears?
Arguably the best living saxophonist, Chris Potter, is deaf in one ear. He just listens to drum solos from that side.
bombarded by Facebook adverts
My left ear is completely broken. No hearing in my left ear whatsoever since birth.
The way I look at this is that there are both benefits and disadvantages to this state of affairs.
(Stereo is a bit lost on me though....)
probably something related to audioemission. The phenomenon of audio being generated by your inner ear after being exposed to sound.I've been bombarded by Facebook adverts for some headphones which send some kind of a pulse into your ear, and measure the response (no idea what kind of pulse, and what kind of response) and then calibrate themselves to give you an individualised sound based on what those readings were. I have no idea if it is sound, or whether it has an audible (or even desirable) difference, but sounds interesting.